There was a reddit post sort of on this that I commented on. I then fed my comments back through ChatGPT to tighten things up but what are people's thoughts on the below? Please feel free to suggest your own ideas (but if you bring up a flat tax or "Fair Tax" be prepared to be attacked).
For the sake of keeping this thread on topic, please assume that the goal of the tax changes is to keep tax revenues the same or increase them to pay down the debt. If we talk about tax theory itself we can remain non-partisan. Discussing spending cuts will inevitably lead us down a partisan wormhole. Please feel free to make your own thread if that is what you'd like to discuss.
If we were serious about reducing the federal deficit and making the tax code more efficient, I think the conversation would have to include some fairly unglamorous changes. A few thoughts:
1. Social Security
Lifting or removing the Social Security payroll tax cap seems like the most straightforward way to address most of the program’s funding gap.
2. Broader tax base
If the U.S. wants the kind of fiscal capacity that many European countries have, it probably means taxes go up somewhat across the board—not just on high earners. Those countries fund their systems with broader tax bases than we do.
3. Introduce a VAT
Sales taxes have issues, but a value-added tax is the backbone of revenue systems in most developed countries. It’s relatively efficient, hard to evade, and raises a lot of revenue with a broad base.
4. Reform capital taxation
A few changes that seem worth discussing:
5. Corporate tax reform
There’s a strong argument that corporate taxes are inefficient and mostly passed on to workers, consumers, or shareholders anyway. It might make more sense to tax those parties directly rather than the corporation itself.
6. Reduce distortionary subsidies
Some parts of the tax code mostly just inflate prices in the markets they target. For example:
Land value taxes are interesting because they’re difficult to avoid and don’t distort economic behavior the way many other taxes do.
8. Simplify retirement taxation
One idea I’ve wondered about: moving entirely to Roth-style retirement accounts. Tax the money when it goes in rather than when it comes out. That would simplify decision-making for savers and eliminate a lot of tax-planning games.
For the sake of keeping this thread on topic, please assume that the goal of the tax changes is to keep tax revenues the same or increase them to pay down the debt. If we talk about tax theory itself we can remain non-partisan. Discussing spending cuts will inevitably lead us down a partisan wormhole. Please feel free to make your own thread if that is what you'd like to discuss.
If we were serious about reducing the federal deficit and making the tax code more efficient, I think the conversation would have to include some fairly unglamorous changes. A few thoughts:
1. Social Security
Lifting or removing the Social Security payroll tax cap seems like the most straightforward way to address most of the program’s funding gap.
2. Broader tax base
If the U.S. wants the kind of fiscal capacity that many European countries have, it probably means taxes go up somewhat across the board—not just on high earners. Those countries fund their systems with broader tax bases than we do.
3. Introduce a VAT
Sales taxes have issues, but a value-added tax is the backbone of revenue systems in most developed countries. It’s relatively efficient, hard to evade, and raises a lot of revenue with a broad base.
4. Reform capital taxation
A few changes that seem worth discussing:
- Tax capital gains closer to ordinary income, at least for higher earners
- Eliminate stepped-up basis at death
- Consider increasing the estate tax
5. Corporate tax reform
There’s a strong argument that corporate taxes are inefficient and mostly passed on to workers, consumers, or shareholders anyway. It might make more sense to tax those parties directly rather than the corporation itself.
6. Reduce distortionary subsidies
Some parts of the tax code mostly just inflate prices in the markets they target. For example:
- The mortgage interest deduction likely raises housing prices
- Similar targeted subsidies often distort markets more than they help
Land value taxes are interesting because they’re difficult to avoid and don’t distort economic behavior the way many other taxes do.
8. Simplify retirement taxation
One idea I’ve wondered about: moving entirely to Roth-style retirement accounts. Tax the money when it goes in rather than when it comes out. That would simplify decision-making for savers and eliminate a lot of tax-planning games.
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